CADMUS: A Novel MRI-Based Classification of Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage Associated With Cerebral Small Vessel Disease.

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Version: Final published version
License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_169CE9D75841
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
CADMUS: A Novel MRI-Based Classification of Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage Associated With Cerebral Small Vessel Disease.
Journal
Neurology
Author(s)
Goeldlin M.B., Mueller M., Siepen B.M., Zhang W., Ozkan H., Locatelli M., Du Y., Valenzuela W., Radojewski P., Hakim A., Kaesmacher J., Meinel T.R., Clénin L., Branca M., Strambo D., Fischer T., Medlin F., Peters N., Carrera E., Lovblad K.O., Karwacki G.M., Cereda C.W., Niederhauser J., Mono M.L., Mueller A., Wegener S., Sartoretti S., Polymeris A.A., Altersberger V., Katan M., Psychogios M., Sturzenegger R., Nauer C., Schaerer M., Buitrago Tellez C., Renaud S., Minkner Klahre K., Z'Graggen W.J., Bervini D., Bonati L.H., Wiest R., Arnold M., Simister R.J., Wilson D., Jäger H.R., Fischer U., Werring D.J., Seiffge D.J.
Working group(s)
for Swiss Stroke Registry Investigators and SIGNAL Investigators
ISSN
1526-632X (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0028-3878
Publication state
Published
Issued date
09/01/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
102
Number
1
Pages
e207977
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is the major cause of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). There is no comprehensive, easily applicable classification of ICH subtypes according to the presumed underlying SVD using MRI. We developed an MRI-based classification for SVD-related ICH.
We performed a retrospective study in the prospectively collected Swiss Stroke Registry (SSR, 2013-2019) and the Stroke InvestiGation in North And central London (SIGNAL) cohort. Patients with nontraumatic, SVD-related ICH and available MRI within 3 months were classified as Cerebral Amyloid angiopathy (CAA), Deep perforator arteriopathy (DPA), Mixed CAA-DPA, or Undetermined SVD using hemorrhagic and nonhemorrhagic MRI markers (CADMUS classification). The primary outcome was inter-rater reliability using Gwet's AC1. Secondary outcomes were recurrent ICH/ischemic stroke at 3 months according to the CADMUS phenotype. We performed Firth penalized logistic regressions and competing risk analyses.
The SSR cohort included 1,180 patients (median age [interquartile range] 73 [62-80] years, baseline NIH Stroke Scale 6 [2-12], 45.6% lobar hematoma, systolic blood pressure on admission 166 [145-185] mm Hg). The CADMUS phenotypes were as follows: mixed CAA-DPA (n = 751 patients, 63.6%), undetermined SVD (n = 203, 17.2%), CAA (n = 154, 13.1%), and DPA (n = 72, 6.3%), with a similar distribution in the SIGNAL cohort (n = 313). Inter-rater reliability was good (Gwet's AC1 for SSR/SIGNAL 0.69/0.74). During follow-up, 56 patients had 57 events (28 ICH, 29 ischemic strokes). Three-month event rates were comparable between the CADMUS phenotypes.
CADMUS, a novel MRI-based classification for SVD-associated ICH, is feasible and reproducible and may improve the classification of ICH subtypes in clinical practice and research.
Keywords
Humans, Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Cerebral Hemorrhage/diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Hemorrhage/epidemiology, Stroke/diagnostic imaging, Stroke/epidemiology, Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy/diagnostic imaging
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
09/01/2024 0:03
Last modification date
26/03/2024 8:10
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